Monday, November 14, 2016

NASA Photo of the Day

Explanation:
What is so super about tomorrow's supermoon?
Tomorrow, a full moon will occur that appears slightly larger and brighter than usual.
The reason is that the
Moon's fully illuminated phase occurs within a short time from perigee - when the Moon is its closest to the Earth in its elliptical orbit.
Although the precise conditions that define a
supermoon vary,
tomorrow's supermoon will undoubtedly qualify because it will be the
closest, largest, and brightest full moon in
over 65 years.
One reason
supermoons are popular is because they are so easy to see --
just go outside at sunset and watch an impressive full moon rise!
Since perigee actually occurs tomorrow morning, tonight's
full moon, visible starting at
sunset, should also be impressive.
Pictured here, a
supermoon from 2012
is compared to a micromoon -- when a full Moon occurs near the furthest
part of the Moon's orbit -- so that it appears smaller and dimmer than
usual.
Given
many definitions, at least one
supermoon
occurs each year, with another one coming next month (moon-th).
However, a full moon will not come this close to Earth again until 2034.

Is it just me, or has this Super Moon hype seemingly come out of nowhere in the last few years. I don't remember hearing about this phenomena in the past. I remember recent hype about eclipses, planetary alignments and meteor showers being similar to past buzz, but I just don't remember the Super Moon hype before about 3 or 4 years ago. Oh, wait, here is some data:

So the first real mention of a super moon took place approximately 2 months after this blog started. How did we get by without hyping the size of the full moon prior to 2011?